Join Books.org — it's free

Women's Fiction, African Americans - Fiction & Literature, Occupations - Fiction, Character Types - Fiction
Casting the First Stone by Kimberla Lawson Roby β€” book cover

Casting the First Stone

by Kimberla Lawson Roby
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Blackboard Fiction Book Of The Year 2001

Tanya Black has everything a woman could want: a fulfilling career, a beautiful daughter, an elegant home, and a handsome, charismatic husband who is pastor at a prominent Baptist church. And yet, none of it can hide the growing turbulence in her marriage, which suddenly has Tanya doubting what she once cherished.

Then Curtis goes too far, and Tanya's confronted with the worst betrayal a woman can face. Plunged into a bittersweet journey of discovery, she suddenly finds herself learning painful new lessons about love, loyalty, and sensual temptation. . ..and discovering the wisdom to celebrate the victories that are hers alone.

"An uplifting account of struggles and adjustments."--The Midwest Book Review on Behind Closed Doors

A Featured Alternate Selection of the Literary Guild A Selection of the Black Expressions Book Club

Kimberla Lawson Roby is the author of the acclaimed novels Behind Closed Doors and Here And Now, chosen as A Featured Alternate Selection of The Literary Guild. She lives in Rockford, Illinois with her husband, Will. When asked by readers what inspired her to write a novel, she says, "Becoming a novelist had not been a lifelong dream of mine, but at the same time, I knew that in order for me to find contentment, I had to find something that I love doing whether I received payment for it or not. I took a long, hard look at what my likes and dislikes were, and when I realized that writing continuously rose to the top of my list, I decided to write a novel."

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Black College Today

Blackboard bestselling author Kimberla Lawson Roby takes on one of the most controversial issues in America: corruption and temptation within Church leadership. Casting the First Stone goes behind the scenes of a fictional Chicago church and its struggle to keep faith and commitment alive in the face of ambition. This is the third novel of this author whose previous books won her dedicated fans who turn out for her coast-to-coast bookstore appearances or follow her career closely via the Internet. Roby's connection to her readers is closely reflected in her novels. Her works bring to life Black women whose lives are complex with jobs, children, spouses and lovers in short the kind of lives her readers themselves live. Giving voice to the women who share their concerns with her has always been Roby's aim in each novel she has written. Casting the First Stone listens in on the heart of a woman torn between loving who her husband was and hating who has become. Roby weaves a fast-paced story about faith's challenges in a world made up of material desires and other physical temptations. Roby's newest novel leads here heroine into a new bond with her churchβ€”at peach with her spiritual life. An electrifying read.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

There are few surprises in the insubstantial plot of Roby's third novel (after Here and Now), a story of a marriage that, obviously doomed from the book's opening pages, drags on through repetitive and melodramatic scenes. When she married him eight years ago, Tanya Black thought that Curtis would be a dedicated evangelist preacher, but the power of his current position as pastor of a prominent African-American Baptist church in Chicago has turned his head, and their "model marriage had long since turned into something very ugly and dreadfully different." Curtis flaunts his expensive wardrobe and lifestyle, and he continually begs his congregation for more money. He's having an affair with the deacon's wife, lies outrageously, neglects his daughter and eventually grows physically abusive. Although most of his misbehavior is described in chapter one and grows more flagrant as the book progresses, Tanya dithers through the entire novel deliberating whether she should file for divorce. Roby strives for an ironic twist in making Tanya a counselor for battered women, but this only makes her seem more duped and self-destructive. Because the pointlessness of this marriage seems so clear, there isn't much of a story aside from the stock characters who contribute to the tawdry drama: Alicia, the Blacks' sensitive, six-year-old daughter; Tanya's supportive best friend, Nicole; and James, the perfect man whom Tanya meets. While the book aims to inspire and send a strong Christian message, calling for women to take charge of their lives, the narrative is written in such clich d prose that it cannot effectively address the serious issues of marital strife and domestic violence. 22-city author tour. (Jan.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2002
Publisher
Kensington Publishing Corporation
Pages
384
Format
Mass Market Paperback
ISBN
9780758201799

More by Kimberla Lawson Roby

Similar books